


“She said I might come over for lunch, but she made it clear she had never heard of Craig Claiborne. “I had never heard of her, but someone said they had just taken fantastic Italian cooking lessons from this woman, so I called her and introduced myself and said I would like to talk to her,” Claiborne told me in 1991. She began teaching cooking classes to have something to do and was quickly discovered - as were so many cookbook authors of the day - by the late New York Times food editor Craig Claiborne. She had earned doctorates in biology and natural science from the University of Ferrara when she followed her husband to the United States in the late 1950s. Looking for other traditional Italian cookbooks? Find these here.For all of her achievements - seven bestselling books and an army of fans who turned out for every cooking class - Hazan was an accidental cookbook writer. This time making sure she covered every corner of the country, providing home cooks with the same kind voice, engaging storytelling and authoritative instruction that we have come to know and love as Marvella's way of cooking. In this wonderful cookbook, Marcella shares more recipes from her beloved homeland. Inspired by her well-received debut, Marcella published a follow-up cookbook in 1978, this one, More Classic Italian Cooking. A runaway bestseller, Marcella's easy-to-follow instructions and wonderfully engaging voice, seduced readers into the charming, symbiotic relationship between food and feeding that comes so easily and naturally to the traditional Italian table. In the late 1960s, confident in the skills she had acquired via trial and error, she opened a cooking school. Next, she embarked on writing her first cookbook, The Classic Italian Cook Book, which was published in 1976. One by one, Marcella began to recreate the dishes of her home country, capturing the essence of Italian eating in her new city lifestyle. Uncertain as to how to replicate the experience of food and feast in her new country, she began cooking via memory, recollection, and some old family recipes. Growing up in a household where everybody cooked for and around her, Marcella was suddenly a new cook in a new kitchen in 1950's New York City, a very different landscape than the pastoral one she knew as a girl. Like Julia Child was to French cooking, Marcella was a trendsetter - the first to bring practical technique, cultural provenance, and authentic recipes to home cooks seeking to replicate the traditional foods of Italy.īorn in Italy in 1924, she came to the United States as a young married woman faced with the task of cooking for herself and her husband for the first time in her life. Marcella HazanĪ culinary icon, a beloved instructor, and a gracious host, Marcella Hazan is the most well-respected expert on Italian cooking in American kitchens that our country has ever known. It is renewed each day, as we renew our lives.

The art of cooking never comes to a standstill.
